George Santos is a Republican congressman-elect from New York representing the 3rd District and is preparing to be sworn into the US House of Representatives. However, so much is coming out about his background that indicates that much of the biography he used during the campaign appears to be made up. There is too much to go into, but there are questions about his education, residences, family, religion, and sexual orientation.
So now the Democrats in Congress, especially the House, where the Republicans will now have a thin majority, are demanding that Santos resign, that there be investigations, that crimes may have been committed. For the mainstream media, predictably, it is a full-scale feeding frenzy.
I will not attempt to defend Santos here. I saw his Fox News interview with Tulsi Gabbard, and, frankly, he came across to me as a flim-flam man. As to the specific allegations, I only know what I read and hear on the news, so I have no opinion except to ask a basic question:
First of all, is it a crime for a candidate to make stuff up about himself in a campaign? If it is, you could indict about 9/10s of Congress. We have a senator in Connecticut, Richard Blumenthal (D), who lied about serving in the US military in Vietnam. The voters of Connecticut don't seem to be bothered by that because they keep re-electing him.
Then there are all the tall tales told by former vice president and failed presidential candidate Al Gore. Remember his having invented the internet? Or his line about him and his ex-wife being the models for the movie, "Love Story"? Or his supposed involvement in "finding" Love Canal (toxic waste disaster in New York State, 1970s)?
What about Joe Biden? How many of those, "I'm the guy who (fill in the blank) can we drag up? He claimed to have personally visited the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh after it was the scene of a mass murder in 2018. He never did. He claimed to have been arrested in South Africa while trying to meet with then-imprisoned Nelson Mandela. That was false. He has lied about his academic achievements in college and law school. I could go on and on, but we all know who Joe Biden is.
Then there is Katie Porter (D-CA). Remember in 2019 when she was mercilessly grilling the CEO of JP Morgan while he was testifying before Congress and told him about a poor JP Morgan employee in her district whose salary was so low she couldn't provide for her family as a single mom. Her name was "Patricia". Boy did she make that JP Morgan CEO squirm. Except there was no Patricia. Katie had made her up. By the way, Katie is back in the news this week over allegations of mistreating a former member of her staff. None of this matters to the voters in her Orange County district because she has been re-elected twice now.
I could go on all day, but the point is made. Congress is full of liars who could give Santos a run for his money any day of the week. If Santos has violated some law by submitting false papers for his candidacy, fine, charge him. Whether he resigns is of no consequence to me. But when it comes to the question of honesty in Congress, specifically as to telling the public lies about your life story, let's not be hypocrites here.